Let’s Talk Care for Pliers and Cutters!

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Let’s Talk Care for Pliers and Cutters! Lindstrom, Tronex and Xuron are 3 of the key brands of pliers and cutters in the Jewelry industry. The Jewelry industry represents only around 10% (yes, just a small portion) of the overall sales for each of these brands. Some of their other industries include electronics, industrial, avionics, production line manufacturing, aerospace and medical. The sad part is that even though we only represent 10% of their business, more than 95% of the issues related to damaged tools come from the Jewelry industry. So why is the Jewelry industry damaging tools at a much higher rate than other industries? There are a couple of factors that need to be considered as a possible causes. The Jewelry industry works with a larger variety of shapes and materials than the other industries. In most cases, the other key industries require a formal education/training program in their respected fields. I’m not saying that they are necessarily more educated than a jeweler, but they most often have more education in the proper use of tools specific to their application requirements. The key is, using the right tool for the right job. The term “Precision Tools” does not have anything to do with their strength, but more with their quality and ability to do a specific task. Paying big money for a cutter doesn’t make it stronger, it more than likely means that it is more specialized. There is no one cutter that will cut all material and all gauges. There is no one pair of pliers that will do all jobs. Depending upon the work that you are doing, you may very well need a very large selection of pliers and cutters. It is VERY important to know the type of metal and gauge size and/or shape of the material that you are cutting. Cutting material that a cutter was not designed to cut, can and most likely will damage them. Know your cutters and know what material and gauge they are rated to cut. When you see the gauge a cutter is rated for, realize that this rating in most cases is for the throat (back, close to the pivot point) and not the tip which is the weakest point of a diagonal type cutter. The industry standard for assigning gauge capacity for cutters is solid copper wire. That is not to say a cutter can only cut copper wire but rather, if a harder material is going to be cut, the capacity of the cutter is reduced accordingly. Damage to pliers quite often comes from people trying to use them as a prying device or from trying to form material they were not designed to work with. You won’t always see a gauge rating for pliers so common sense is needed here. The finer a tip is, the weaker it is. The longer a tip is, the weaker it is. If you have a choice between a long tipped tool and a short tipped tool, choose the short tipped version if possible as it is stronger, it has less flex and it keeps your hand closer to your work which in turn gives you more leverage and control. If you have issues where the tips no longer meet on your pliers, this is an indicator that you have been working with material that is too hard for them and/or that you have been using them as a prying tool. Pliers are NOT designed to perform crimping operations. If you are trying to close crimp beads, use a crimper that is designed to do the job. ALL bare metal tools will rust if not properly cared for. Rust is not only caused by water/humidity. Fumes from flux while soldering and brazing is very corrosive to metal tools. Cleaning your tools with a light coating of oil (3-in-1 oil works well) helps prevent rust. Sewing machine oil and LPS-2 also work very well. WD 40 is not recommended for use on precision hand tools. If you keep your tools in a case, keeping a Silica Gel Desiccant pack in the case will also help prevent rust. My favorite tool to remove rust is my JoolTool. If you don’t have a JoolTool, you can use a brass wire brush and thin oil, or if you have any of the old-style ink erasers, they work great too and follow up with a thin coating of oil. If you damage a pair of cutters or pliers by using them on material or for a task that they were not designed for, this is NOT a manufacturer’s warranty issue but rather a misapplication and/or tool abuse issue. If you make a mistake and damage your tools, own it and learn from it, but don’t blame the manufacturer. Higher end cutters can sometimes be sharpened to remove smaller, shallow nicks. If you damage the fine tips on pliers, quite often they can be reformed and/or reground.

www.Micro-Tools.com


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